A long view of cumulative technological culture
We agree that the emergence of cumulative technological culture was tied to nonsocial cognitive skills, namely, technical-reasoning skills, which allowed humans to constantly acquire and improve information. Our concern is with a reading of the history of cumulative technological culture that is bas...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Behavioral and brain sciences 2020-01, Vol.43, p.e174-e174, Article e174 |
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container_title | The Behavioral and brain sciences |
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creator | O'Brien, Michael J. Bentley, R. Alexander |
description | We agree that the emergence of cumulative technological culture was tied to nonsocial cognitive skills, namely, technical-reasoning skills, which allowed humans to constantly acquire and improve information. Our concern is with a reading of the history of cumulative technological culture that is based largely on modern experiments in simulated settings and less on phenomena crucial to the long-term dynamics of cultural evolution. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/S0140525X20000060 |
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source | Cambridge Journals |
subjects | Cognition & reasoning Cognitive ability Culture Experiments Learning Open Peer Commentary Population Research methodology Success |
title | A long view of cumulative technological culture |
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